<p>Is it true that Penn engineering is inferior to Penn College, and the college is inferior to wharton?</p>
<p>wow. that's some news....</p>
<p>define inferior? i think each section of the school is for ppl who want different things. there are good things about school and there are bad things...</p>
<p>the college is inferior to wharton. wharton must dominate all and have penn be renamed wharton.</p>
<p>joke...</p>
<p>Actually, Wharton University sounds better than Penn. lol</p>
<p>people who do not live in pa or know about penn always calls it Upenn and think that whoever says penn refers to a certain other college in the state...</p>
<p>They are different facets of the school. Wharton is for businessmen. SEAS is for engineers. The college is for liberal arts majors. An engineer studying at the writing intensive Wharton is not a good fit. The same can be said of a Wharton student studying bioengineering at SEAS.</p>
<p>In terms of selectivity, Wharton is indeed more selective than SEAS/the College.</p>
<p>However, different students are attracted to SEAS and the college. There are fewer people who want to be engineers. It also takes a certain person to be an engineer (strong in math). The average SAT for SEAS is 1466. Source: <a href="http://www.collegeconfidential.com/cgi-bin/discus/show.cgi?57277/80962%5B/url%5D">http://www.collegeconfidential.com/cgi-bin/discus/show.cgi?57277/80962</a></p>
<p>The average SAT score for the college is 1401. Catch-22 told me this. But the acceptance rate for the college is lower than SEAS's. Does the SAT differential or the disparity in the acceptance rate mean that the matriculants of each school are significant stronger than the other school? Not at all...</p>